Northeast Energy News Archives | Energy News Network https://energynews.us/category/digest/northeast-energy-news/ Covering the transition to a clean energy economy Fri, 06 Sep 2024 11:55:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://energynews.us/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/cropped-favicon-large-32x32.png Northeast Energy News Archives | Energy News Network https://energynews.us/category/digest/northeast-energy-news/ 32 32 153895404 US Wind gets final federal approval https://energynews.us/newsletter/us-wind-gets-final-federal-approval/ Fri, 06 Sep 2024 11:55:17 +0000 https://energynews.us/?post_type=newspack_nl_cpt&p=2314566 WIND: Federal officials give US Wind’s 2 GW offshore wind project off the Maryland and Delaware coastline its final approval, although local officials have previously threatened to sue if the project got this far. (Capital News Service, Maryland Matters) RENEWABLE ENERGY:  SOLAR: Advocates say Pennsylvania’s largest-ever solar facility, the 220 MW Great Cove project, shows […]

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WIND: Federal officials give US Wind’s 2 GW offshore wind project off the Maryland and Delaware coastline its final approval, although local officials have previously threatened to sue if the project got this far. (Capital News Service, Maryland Matters)

RENEWABLE ENERGY: 

  • Pennsylvania and New Jersey utility Allegheny Electric Cooperative is reportedly set to receive an undisclosed portion of a $7.3 billion federal investment into rural electrification and renewable energy works. (Pennsylvania Capital-Star)
  • New York’s governor attends a Syracuse summit focused on renewable energy’s future role in the economy, touting the state’s steps toward becoming “a national leader in protecting our climate.” (WSYR)

SOLAR: Advocates say Pennsylvania’s largest-ever solar facility, the 220 MW Great Cove project, shows how renewable energy has a place in the fracking-heavy state. (E&E News, subscription)

EQUITY: 

  • New research shows a Baltimore community has much higher levels of black carbon — an air pollutant associated with fossil-fuel burning — than should be expected in a residential area. (Baltimore Sun)
  • Several trade groups form a new coalition aimed at steering Pennsylvania union workers through an equitable transition to a decarbonized economy. (Grist)

BUILDINGS: 

  • Developers file their early plans to remediate and convert a former ExxonMobil tank farm north of Boston into a multi-use space that would include an energy storage facility in addition to residential and commercial components. (Boston.com)
  • Building decarbonization advocates say New York’s progress toward its 2025 energy efficiency target for state facilities is hardly a step in the right direction given that much of the headway is from closing facilities, primarily prisons. (E&E News, subscription)

GRID: A PJM Interconnection executive says the grid operator could propose an accelerated interconnection approval process for shovel-ready generation projects. (Utility Dive)

BATTERIES: A Burlington, Vermont, concert series this summer took its usual diesel generators out of service and replaced them with 1.3 MWh of battery electric generators. (news release)

ELECTRIC VEHICLES: In Massachusetts, Eversource customers begin seeing a relatively new electric vehicle program fee delineated on their bills that was previously tucked into the general delivery charges. (WCVB)

COMMENTARY:

  • The head of an economic development nonprofit says Massachusetts needs to adopt equity-focused targets and a scorecard to evaluate what the state is doing for environmental justice communities amid its renewable energy transition. (CommonWealth Beacon)
  • As Maine looks to approve an offshore wind port in Searsport, three environmental activists discuss what was learned about community engagement and benefit setting during a similar development process in Salem, Massachusetts. (Bangor Daily News)

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US Wind gets final federal approval is an article from Energy News Network, a nonprofit news service covering the clean energy transition. If you would like to support us please make a donation.

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Philadelphia Gas Commission limits stakeholder participation https://energynews.us/newsletter/philadelphia-gas-commission-limits-stakeholder-participation/ Thu, 05 Sep 2024 12:04:34 +0000 https://energynews.us/?post_type=newspack_nl_cpt&p=2314545 FOSSIL FUELS: The Philadelphia Gas Commission decides to limit third-party stakeholders from participating in the municipal utility’s budget process over activists’ concerns that it will reduce transparency and public input. (WHYY) ALSO: A preliminary federal report finds a fatal August 11 gas explosion at a Bel Air, Maryland, home was preceded by two reports of […]

Philadelphia Gas Commission limits stakeholder participation is an article from Energy News Network, a nonprofit news service covering the clean energy transition. If you would like to support us please make a donation.

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FOSSIL FUELS: The Philadelphia Gas Commission decides to limit third-party stakeholders from participating in the municipal utility’s budget process over activists’ concerns that it will reduce transparency and public input. (WHYY)

ALSO: A preliminary federal report finds a fatal August 11 gas explosion at a Bel Air, Maryland, home was preceded by two reports of gas odors the night before, and that the local utility had previously been fined over the proximity of gas and power lines. (Baltimore Sun)

BUILDINGS: In Maryland, Baltimore County’s council decides to use state funds to convert part of a decommissioned coal plant site into a waterfront park. (Baltimore Sun)

TRANSIT:

  • The Massachusetts Port Authority says it’s seeking $280 million in federal grants to electrify its container and cruise ship terminals and reduce emissions at its facilities, with plans to spend another $70 million from its own coffers. (WGBH)
  • Two Massachusetts lawmakers introduce legislation to provide businesses with tax credits if they offer public transit subsidies as a worker benefit. (WHDH)

AFFORDABILITY: 

  • Connecticut’s governor says a special legislative session on electric rate relief won’t be enough to solve affordability issues, given that “the fundamental problem we have right here is supply and demand.” (CT Mirror)
  • Maine regulators say they will soon draft new rules disallowing utilities from using ratepayer funds for advertising, lobbying and political expenses and requiring them to account for and report such expenses. (Portland Press Herald)

ELECTRIC VEHICLES: In New York, the Oneida Indian Nation is set to receive nearly $13 million in Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funds to install 52 electric vehicle fast charging stations in its territory. (WUTR)

GRID: 

  • State lawmakers across the PJM Interconnection territory, still blown away by a leap in capacity prices in the grid operator’s last auction, are considering new policies and regulations to try to bring prices down in the next 2026-2027 capacity auction. (Utility Dive)
  • A central Maine town will vote in November on a 180-day moratorium on new high-voltage power lines within its borders over concerns about the  Aroostook Renewable Gateway Project. (Morning Sentinel)

SOLAR: 

  • Maryland energy officials kick off an application period for funds to install solar systems at parking lots and garages, with up to $4.8 million available for FY 2025. (news release)
  • A private equity firm in Texas has purchased bankrupt Vermont solar developer iSun, which will be rebranded as Legacy Solar under a new leadership team. (VT Digger)
  • Workers begin building a 3.6 MW solar project on a former hay production field in northern New York, with plans to bring in sheep for rotational grazing. (news release)
  • A developer finishes construction of a 40-acre community solar project near Buffalo, New York, with enough capacity for 850 residential subscribers and one commercial business. (WIVB)

UTILITIES: Public power movements in New York have gained traction amid high costs, but some utilities are encouraging organized labor unions to see such a shift as a negative for workers. (City & State)

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Philadelphia Gas Commission limits stakeholder participation is an article from Energy News Network, a nonprofit news service covering the clean energy transition. If you would like to support us please make a donation.

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Union-busting allegations at Pittsburgh battery plant https://energynews.us/newsletter/union-busting-allegations-at-pittsburgh-battery-plant/ Wed, 04 Sep 2024 11:58:29 +0000 https://energynews.us/?post_type=newspack_nl_cpt&p=2314515 BATTERIES: A battery plant in a Pittsburgh suburb that has taken advantage of or is eligible for billions in public funds has created poor working conditions and has fired union-supporting workers, according to some employees. (Pennsylvania Capital-Star) COURTS: Environmental and transit groups sue New York’s governor over her unilateral decision to delay the Manhattan traffic […]

Union-busting allegations at Pittsburgh battery plant is an article from Energy News Network, a nonprofit news service covering the clean energy transition. If you would like to support us please make a donation.

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BATTERIES: A battery plant in a Pittsburgh suburb that has taken advantage of or is eligible for billions in public funds has created poor working conditions and has fired union-supporting workers, according to some employees. (Pennsylvania Capital-Star)

COURTS: Environmental and transit groups sue New York’s governor over her unilateral decision to delay the Manhattan traffic congestion tolling plan, which they say was illegal and unconstitutional. (E&E News, subscription)

WIND: 

  • An offshore wind developer asks New Jersey utility regulators to let it pause development of a project off the Long Beach Island coast through late December, citing a lack of manufacturers willing to build its turbine blades. (WHYY) 
  • Vineyard Wind’s broken turbine blade, misinformation campaigns and a lack of forthrightness from offshore wind developers is causing a “public relations nightmare” for the industry. (Rhode Island Current)
  • Revolution Wind workers install the 704 MW project’s first wind turbine in the waters near Connecticut and Rhode Island. (news release)

TRANSIT: Maryland’s governor proposes a 7% cut to the six-year transportation budget to help fill a $1.3 billion funding hole, a measure that would mean deferring maintenance and slowing down the pace of new electric bus purchases. (Daily Record)

PIPELINES: Maine’s public advocate says the rate hikes sought by three separate pipeline operators in the state would lead to higher retail electric and natural gas prices for customers. (Bangor Daily News)

GRID: 

  • Federal energy regulators approve a non-monetary settlement between New York State Electric and Gas and the Northeast Power Coordinating Council over the utility’s failure to comply with back-up control center requirements in 2018. (RTO Insider, subscription)
  • Thirty-five Maryland lawmakers respond to a news outlet’s survey on the Maryland Piedmont Reliability Project, with none supporting the use of eminent domain for the project. (Fox Baltimore)
  • Ratepayer advocates tell PJM Interconnection that it should join its counterparts in New England, New York and elsewhere to include power plants with reliability must-run contracts into its capacity auctions to help lower prices. (Utility Dive)

SOLAR: 

  • A developer begins commercial operations of what they say is the largest solar project in Pennsylvania: two facilities with a combined 220 MW capacity in Franklin and Fulton counties. (news release) 
  • The zoning board of Maryland’s Carroll County is today scheduled to talk about six solar farms proposed for currently ineligible farmland. (Baltimore Sun)

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Union-busting allegations at Pittsburgh battery plant is an article from Energy News Network, a nonprofit news service covering the clean energy transition. If you would like to support us please make a donation.

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Massachusetts cities embrace new emission-slashing building code https://energynews.us/newsletter/massachusetts-cities-embrace-new-emission-slashing-building-code/ Tue, 03 Sep 2024 12:10:10 +0000 https://energynews.us/?post_type=newspack_nl_cpt&p=2314483 BUILDINGS: Massachusetts climate activists are pleased by how quickly a few dozen cities and towns have adopted an optional building code that helps to lower building emissions. (Energy News Network) ALSO: New Jersey is pushing forward to install more air conditioning units in its classrooms to mitigate student learning losses, but it can take over […]

Massachusetts cities embrace new emission-slashing building code is an article from Energy News Network, a nonprofit news service covering the clean energy transition. If you would like to support us please make a donation.

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BUILDINGS: Massachusetts climate activists are pleased by how quickly a few dozen cities and towns have adopted an optional building code that helps to lower building emissions. (Energy News Network)

ALSO: New Jersey is pushing forward to install more air conditioning units in its classrooms to mitigate student learning losses, but it can take over a year after receiving funds to install. (NJ Spotlight)

WIND: Maine officials, business owners and other environmentally minded stakeholders are looking to increase the number of small-scale distributed wind turbines in the state. (Portland Press Herald)

FUNDING: 

  • New York City voters overwhelmingly backed a 2022 act to borrow $4.2 billion for climate resilience and decarbonization efforts, but less than 2% of those bonds have been directed toward city projects. (The City)
  • Massachusetts has expected to get a large piece of the hundreds of billions of federal dollars soon to be available for renewable energy projects, but another Trump administration could derail that plan. (Boston Globe)

GRID: 

COURTS: Pennsylvania’s top court still hasn’t scheduled oral arguments for two cases that will cement the fate of the state’s participation in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative. (Spotlight PA)

RENEWABLE POWER: 

  • Renewable energy projects across Maryland, from a 70-mile transmission line to a slate of solar projects in an agricultural county, face residential pushback. (Capital Gazette)
  • New Hampshire’s climate mitigation and renewable power strategy could soon change as the state’s governor prepares to leave office and numerous potential successors outline more expansive plans. (NHPR)

CLIMATE: 

  • Vermont’s reputation as a climate-safe haven is put into question by the number and intensity of major floods over the past few years. (NHPR)
  • In New York City, environmental justice advocates say they want to provide more input into climate projects being developed by the city and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to help increase their effectiveness. (Inside Climate News)

TRANSIT:

  • New York City’s transit agency ends a year-long fare holiday piloted on one bus route in each of the city’s boroughs, seeing increased ridership but finding almost half of bus riders didn’t pay their fare on any line. (Gothamist)
  • Tens of thousands of Massachusetts low-income residents will become eligible this week for reduced Boston transit system fares. (WBUR)

COMMENTARY: A former Maine lawmaker writes that legislation to help coastal communities mitigate the impact of climate change ought to be passed, despite the cost of doing so. (Bangor Daily News)

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Massachusetts cities embrace new emission-slashing building code is an article from Energy News Network, a nonprofit news service covering the clean energy transition. If you would like to support us please make a donation.

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Morgan Stanley warns PJM prices could go higher https://energynews.us/newsletter/morgan-stanley-warns-pjm-prices-could-go-higher/ Fri, 30 Aug 2024 12:27:25 +0000 https://energynews.us/?post_type=newspack_nl_cpt&p=2314461 GRID: Investment firm Morgan Stanley warns prices could surge even higher in PJM Interconnection’s next capacity auction, but another researcher says the analysis may be underestimating how much new capacity will come available. (Utility Dive) ALSO:  EFFICIENCY:  OVERSIGHT:  ELECTRIC VEHICLES: A Vermont utility is asking the public for input on where to locate EV chargers […]

Morgan Stanley warns PJM prices could go higher is an article from Energy News Network, a nonprofit news service covering the clean energy transition. If you would like to support us please make a donation.

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GRID: Investment firm Morgan Stanley warns prices could surge even higher in PJM Interconnection’s next capacity auction, but another researcher says the analysis may be underestimating how much new capacity will come available. (Utility Dive)

ALSO: 

EFFICIENCY: 

OVERSIGHT: 

  • Consumer advocates in New York struggle for resources as Gov. Kathy Hochul has twice vetoed bills that would reimburse their work on behalf of ratepayers. (New York Focus)
  • The Philadelphia Gas Commission approves new rules restricting public participation in the city’s gas utility budgeting, which climate activists say will shut them out of the process. (WHYY)

ELECTRIC VEHICLES: A Vermont utility is asking the public for input on where to locate EV chargers funded by a $4.8 million federal grant. (VT Digger)

COAL: Maryland officials grant a draft permit to a CSX coal export terminal, requiring the company to monitor and limit pollutants in water discharge. (Capital Gazette)

WIND: 

SOLAR: 

POLITICS: The developer of a Maryland power line gave $10,000 to sponsor an event for state officials at the Democratic National Convention, but says the sponsorship was meant to “build visibility” and not advance any particular project. (Fox 45)

COMMENTARY: A Maine environmental advocate says Iberdrola’s proposed takeover of Central Maine Power’s parent company could affect the state’s climate goals. (Portland Press Herald)

More from the Energy News Network: Midwest | Southeast | Northeast | West

Morgan Stanley warns PJM prices could go higher is an article from Energy News Network, a nonprofit news service covering the clean energy transition. If you would like to support us please make a donation.

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